House Speaker John Boehner acknowledged Thursday that presidential campaigns get "off message," but sidestepped questions about GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney's controversial comments that have put congressional Republicans in the awkward position of defending their nominee.

"Everybody is going to try to make this election about everything other than what it is. The American people are asking the question, where are the jobs? And so the focus is on jobs," Boehner insisted at a news conference.

Romney's remarks, leaked on a video from a May fund-raiser in Florida, showed the Republican candidate dismissing 47% of Americans "who are dependent on government" and will vote for President Barack Obama "no matter what."

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Instead of answering questions about those comments, Boehner repeatedly pivoted back to the issue he has been pounding on for months -- jobs.

The Ohio Republican said Romney has a plan to get people back to work and cited his own personal experience, noting two of his brothers and two of his brothers-in-law have recently lost their jobs in the economic downturn.

And Boehner signaled he was pushing for his party to zero-in the on the economy.

"You're going to have candidates -- both campaigns, on both sides -- say things that get off the message. The message is: Let's stay focused on jobs because that's what the American people want us to stay focused on."